Superdome Power Outage Delays Super Bowl

In an incredibly high-profile snag in the midst of the country's most popular televised event, the Super Bowl was delayed by about 35 minutes in the third quarter by a power failure in half of New Orleans' Superdome.

NFL officials asked players to stay on the field as the stadium tried to restore power. Lights gradually came back on, a few at a time, as Baltimore Ravens and San Francisco 49ers players stretched to try to stay loose.

The game wasn't just delayed by darkness: CBS said the 49ers' communications equipment went down, while the power on the Ravens' side was quickly restored.

Sideline reporter Steve Tasker first informed viewers of the outage after a commercial break. He said it might be a few minutes before viewers would hear regular announcer Jim Nantz, because "half the power in New Orleans' stadium, the Super Dome here, is out."

He said the scoreboard and "almost a perfect semi-circle" of the lights around the stadium went dark. No one was reported injured.

The delay halted the momentum for the Ravens, who led the 49ers 28-6 when the outage occurred.

CBS's regular commentators were back dissecting the game within minutes. They traded jokes about whether the outage was caused by Beyonce's light-filled halftime show or a "power surge" by the Ravens' offense.